Published September 18, 2003, in The Spokesman Review (Spokane, WA)

Sara Leaming Staff writer

Arm yourself.

That was the message heard by a small group of Gonzaga University
School of
Law students Wednesday by a controversial Washington, D.C., scholar.

John R. Lott Jr. of the American Enterprise Institute was at Gonzaga
to
speak about his book, '' More Guns, Less Crime: Understanding Crime
and Gun
Controls Laws." The book, like his speech Wednesday, cites various
statistics
that Lott says disprove the arguments of gun -control advocates.

The event was part of the school's Federalist Society for Law and Public
Policy Studies fall speaker series.

''There are lots of things that affect crime rates and I don't think
guns
are near the top," Lott told the group of about a dozen.

By arming society, crime will be reduced, Lott contends.

'' Guns make it easier for bad things to happen, but they also make it
easier for people to protect themselves against bad things," he said.
Lott, a former senior research scholar at Yale University School of Law
and
chief economist for the U.S. Sentencing Commission, now researches
crime,
education, and campaign finance for the institute.

His book has been widely panned by gun -control advocates, including
The
Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, which calls Lott's findings
''flawed
and misleading."

Lott told Wednesday's group that guns are wrongly portrayed as evil.
He
told the group the media are largely responsible for society's
perception of
guns, because they take a one-sided view of gun violence.

''Rarely ever do you hear about people using guns to protect
themselves,"
Lott said.

But one such case in Spokane received a lot of media attention in April.
Television stations aired stories and The Spokesman-Review put the news
on
page one when a local gun shop owner - a former police officer -
shot and
wounded an armed burglar he caught robbing his store.

Spokane police quoted in the story said the shooting was justified but
that
they do not support people putting themselves in threatening situations.

Lott argued that remaining passive in the face of crime is a mistake. He
cited statistics showing that the presence of a gun increases the
ability of a
woman to defend herself against an attack.

One female student, who asked that she not be named, said she came to
Wednesday's presentation because she carries a gun for protection and
believes
what Lott said is, in some ways, right.

Other students disagreed. Some said they came to the forum expecting a
legal discussion about the Second Amendment, not a call to arms.

''The solution that he offers up is scary," said law student Josh Stinn.
''He's not talking about challenging the right to have ( guns) , but
that we
should carry them around all the time. He's talking about vigilantism."

Since the first news search was done additional news stories have been
added to Nexis:

There are thus now 218 unique stories, and a total of 294 stories counting
duplicates (the stories in yellow were duplicates): Excel file for
general overview and specific stories. Explicit mentions of defensive gun use
increase from 2 to 3 now.